Poetry, An Affinity with Sheep and other poems

Oberon’s Midsummer Night’s madness

I watched you Titania:

the blue veins that

travel in patterns

on your thighs

like tributaries

seeking the delta

at the river mouth,

the froth where legs part.

You mothered this morning

with dawn-fresh kisses

and milk-drop promises

soft-lipped, gentle

as filigree of spider’s web,

melting the steaming warmth

of a swelling dewy day,

and my heated breath.

Then your protest;

I heard your keening noises,

animal whimpers

indecent demands.

Now I, making my mark,

am utterly, hopelessly,

vulgarly vanquished, 

pretending the victor.

I sheathe my sword

and jealously tend

any hint of hurt

under my cupped palm.

You curl in foetal ball.

I stand above you, spent,

with fractured feathers,

and wonder which way

the wind blows.